OF THE SUBORDINATION OF THE POWERS OF THE COMMON-WEALTH.
Sec. THOUGH in a constituted
common-wealth, standing upon its own basis, and acting
according to its own nature, that is, acting for the
preservation of the community, there can be but one
supreme power, which is the legislative, to which
all the rest are and must be subordinate, yet the
legislative being only a fiduciary power to act for
certain ends, there remains still in the people a
supreme power to remove or alter the legislative,
when they find the legislative act contrary to the
trust reposed in them: for all power given with
trust for the attaining an end, being limited by that
end, whenever that end is manifestly neglected, or
opposed, the trust must necessarily be forfeited,
and the power devolve into the hands of those that
gave it, who may place it anew where they shall think
best for their safety and security. And thus
the community perpetually retains a supreme power of
saving themselves from the attempts and designs of
any body, even of their legislators, whenever they
shall be so foolish, or so wicked, as to lay and carry
on designs against the liberties and properties of
the subject: for no man or society of men, having
a power to deliver up their preservation, or consequently
the means of it, to the absolute will and arbitrary
dominion of another; when ever any one shall go about
to bring them into such a slavish condition, they will
always have a right to preserve, what they have not
a power to part with; and to rid themselves of those,
who invade this fundamental, sacred, and unalterable
law of self-preservation, for which they entered into
society. And thus the community may be said in
this respect to be always the supreme power, but not
as considered under any form of government, because
this power of the people can never take place till
the government be dissolved.
Sec. In all cases, whilst
the government subsists, the legislative is the supreme
power: for what can give laws to another, must
needs be superior to him; and since the legislative
is no otherwise legislative of the society, but by
the right it has to make laws for all the parts, and
for every member of the society, prescribing rules
to their actions, and giving power of execution, where
they are transgressed, the legislative must needs
be the supreme, and all other powers, in any members
or parts of the society, derived from and subordinate
to it.
Sec. In some commonwealths,
where the legislative is not always in being, and
the executive is vested in a single person, who has
also a share in the legislative; there that single
person in a very tolerable sense may also be called
supreme: not that he has in himself all the supreme
power, which is that of law-making; but because he
has in him the supreme execution, from whom all inferior
magistrates derive all their several subordinate powers,
or at least the greatest part of them: having
also no legislative superior to him, there being no
law to be made without his consent, which cannot be
expected should ever subject him to the other part
of the legislative, he is properly enough in this
sense supreme. But yet it is to be observed, that
tho’ oaths of allegiance and fealty are taken
to him, it is not to him as supreme legislator, but
as supreme executor of the law, made by a joint power
of him with others; allegiance being nothing but an
obedience according to law, which when he violates,
he has no right to obedience, nor can claim it otherwise
than as the public person vested with the power of
the law, and so is to be considered as the image,
phantom, or representative of the common-wealth, acted
by the will of the society, declared in its laws;
and thus he has no will, no power, but that of the
law. But when he quits this representation, this
public will, and acts by his own private will, he
degrades himself, and is but a single private person
without power, and without will, that has any right
to obedience; the members owing no obedience but to
the public will of the society.
Sec. The executive power,
placed any where but in a person that has also a share
in the legislative, is visibly subordinate and accountable
to it, and may be at pleasure changed and displaced;
so that it is not the supreme executive power, that
is exempt from subordination, but the supreme executive
power vested in one, who having a share in the legislative,
has no distinct superior legislative to be subordinate
and accountable to, farther than he himself shall join
and consent; so that he is no more subordinate than
he himself shall think fit, which one may certainly
conclude will be but very little. Of other ministerial
and subordinate powers in a commonwealth, we need not
speak, they being so multiplied with infinite variety,
in the different customs and constitutions of distinct
commonwealths, that it is impossible to give a particular
account of them all. Only thus much, which is
necessary to our present purpose, we may take notice
of concerning them, that they have no manner of authority,
any of them, beyond what is by positive grant and
commission delegated to them, and are all of them
accountable to some other power in the common-wealth.
Sec. It is not necessary,
no, nor so much as convenient, that the legislative
should be always in being; but absolutely necessary
that the executive power should, because there is
not always need of new laws to be made, but always
need of execution of the laws that are made. When
the legislative hath put the execution of the laws,
they make, into other hands, they have a power still
to resume it out of those hands, when they find cause,
and to punish for any maladministration against the
laws. The same holds also in regard of the federative
power, that and the executive being both ministerial
and subordinate to the legislative, which, as has
been shewed, in a constituted common-wealth is the
supreme. The legislative also in this case being
supposed to consist of several persons, (for if it
be a single person, it cannot but be always in being,
and so will, as supreme, naturally have the supreme
executive power, together with the legislative) may
assemble, and exercise their legislature, at the times
that either their original constitution, or their
own adjournment, appoints, or when they please; if
neither of these hath appointed any time, or there
be no other way prescribed to convoke them: for
the supreme power being placed in them by the people,
it is always in them, and they may exercise it when
they please, unless by their original constitution
they are limited to certain seasons, or by an act
of their supreme power they have adjourned to a certain
time; and when that time comes, they have a right to
assemble and act again.
Sec. If the legislative,
or any part of it, be made up of representatives chosen
for that time by the people, which afterwards return
into the ordinary state of subjects, and have no share
in the legislature but upon a new choice, this power
of chusing must also be exercised by the people, either
at certain appointed seasons, or else when they are
summoned to it; and in this latter case the power of
convoking the legislative is ordinarily placed in the
executive, and has one of these two limitations in
respect of time: that either the original constitution
requires their assembling and acting at certain intervals,
and then the executive power does nothing but ministerially
issue directions for their electing and assembling,
according to due forms; or else it is left to his
prudence to call them by new elections, when the occasions
or exigencies of the public require the amendment of
old, or making of new laws, or the redress or prevention
of any inconveniencies, that lie on, or threaten the
people.
Sec. It may be demanded
here, What if the executive power, being possessed
of the force of the common-wealth, shall make use of
that force to hinder the meeting and acting of the
legislative, when the original constitution, or the
public exigencies require it? I say, using force
upon the people without authority, and contrary to
the trust put in him that does so, is a state of war
with the people, who have a right to reinstate their
legislative in the exercise of their power: for
having erected a legislative, with an intent they should
exercise the power of making laws, either at certain
set times, or when there is need of it, when they
are hindered by any force from what is so necessary
to the society, and wherein the safety and preservation
of the people consists, the people have a right to
remove it by force. In all states and conditions,
the true remedy of force without authority, is to oppose
force to it. The use of force without authority,
always puts him that uses it into a state of war,
as the aggressor, and renders him liable to be treated
accordingly.
Sec. The power of assembling
and dismissing the legislative, placed in the executive,
gives not the executive a superiority over it, but
is a fiduciary trust placed in him, for the safety
of the people, in a case where the uncertainty and
variableness of human affairs could not bear a steady
fixed rule: for it not being possible, that the
first framers of the government should, by any foresight,
be so much masters of future events, as to be able
to prefix so just periods of return and duration to
the assemblies of the legislative, in all times to
come, that might exactly answer all the exigencies
of the common-wealth; the best remedy could be found
for this defect, was to trust this to the prudence
of one who was always to be present, and whose business
it was to watch over the public good. Constant
frequent meetings of the legislative, and long continuations
of their assemblies, without necessary occasion, could
not but be burdensome to the people, and must necessarily
in time produce more dangerous inconveniencies, and
yet the quick turn of affairs might be sometimes such
as to need their present help: any delay of their
convening might endanger the public; and sometimes
too their business might be so great, that the limited
time of their sitting might be too short for their
work, and rob the public of that benefit which could
be had only from their mature deliberation. What
then could be done in this case to prevent the community
from being exposed some time or other to eminent hazard,
on one side or the other, by fixed intervals and periods,
set to the meeting and acting of the legislative,
but to intrust it to the prudence of some, who being
present, and acquainted with the state of public affairs,
might make use of this prerogative for the public
good? and where else could this be so well placed
as in his hands, who was intrusted with the execution
of the laws for the same end? Thus supposing
the regulation of times for the assembling and sitting
of the legislative, not settled by the original constitution,
it naturally fell into the hands of the executive,
not as an arbitrary power depending on his good pleasure,
but with this trust always to have it exercised only
for the public weal, as the occurrences of times and
change of affairs might require. Whether settled
periods of their convening, or a liberty left to the
prince for convoking the legislative, or perhaps a
mixture of both, hath the least inconvenience attending
it, it is not my business here to inquire, but only
to shew, that though the executive power may have
the prerogative of convoking and dissolving such conventions
of the legislative, yet it is not thereby superior
to it.
Sec. Things of this world
are in so constant a flux, that nothing remains long
in the same state. Thus people, riches, trade,
power, change their stations, flourishing mighty cities
come to ruin, and prove in times neglected desolate
corners, whilst other unfrequented places grow into
populous countries, filled with wealth and inhabitants.
But things not always changing equally, and private
interest often keeping up customs and privileges,
when the reasons of them are ceased, it often comes
to pass, that in governments, where part of the legislative
consists of representatives chosen by the people, that
in tract of time this representation becomes very
unequal and disproportionate to the reasons it was
at first established upon. To what gross absurdities
the following of custom, when reason has left it,
may lead, we may be satisfied, when we see the bare
name of a town, of which there remains not so much
as the ruins, where scarce so much housing as a sheepcote,
or more inhabitants than a shepherd is to be found,
sends as many representatives to the grand assembly
of law-makers, as a whole county numerous in people,
and powerful in riches. This strangers stand amazed
at, and every one must confess needs a remedy; tho’
most think it hard to find one, because the constitution
of the legislative being the original and supreme
act of the society, antecedent to all positive laws
in it, and depending wholly on the people, no inferior
power can alter it. And therefore the people,
when the legislative is once constituted, having,
in such a government as we have been speaking of, no
power to act as long as the government stands; this
inconvenience is thought incapable of a remedy.
Sec. Salus populi
suprema lex, is certainly so just and fundamental
a rule, that he, who sincerely follows it, cannot
dangerously err. If therefore the executive, who
has the power of convoking the legislative, observing
rather the true proportion, than fashion of representation,
regulates, not by old custom, but true reason, the
number of members, in all places that have a right
to be distinctly represented, which no part of the
people however incorporated can pretend to, but in
proportion to the assistance which it affords to the
public, it cannot be judged to have set up a new legislative,
but to have restored the old and true one, and to
have rectified the disorders which succession of time
had insensibly, as well as inevitably introduced:
For it being the interest as well as intention of the
people, to have a fair and equal representative; whoever
brings it nearest to that, is an undoubted friend
to, and establisher of the government, and cannot
miss the consent and approbation of the community;
prerogative being nothing but a power, in the hands
of the prince, to provide for the public good, in
such cases, which depending upon unforeseen and uncertain
occurrences, certain and unalterable laws could not
safely direct; whatsoever shall be done manifestly
for the good of the people, and the establishing the
government upon its true foundations, is, and always
will be, just prerogative, The power of erecting new
corporations, and therewith new representatives, carries
with it a supposition, that in time the measures of
representation might vary, and those places have a
just right to be represented which before had none;
and by the same reason, those cease to have a right,
and be too inconsiderable for such a privilege, which
before had it. ’Tis not a change from the
present state, which perhaps corruption or decay has
introduced, that makes an inroad upon the government,
but the tendency of it to injure or oppress the people,
and to set up one part or party, with a distinction
from, and an unequal subjection of the rest.
Whatsoever cannot but be acknowledged to be of advantage
to the society, and people in general, upon just and
lasting measures, will always, when done, justify
itself; and whenever the people shall chuse their
representatives upon just and undeniably equal measures,
suitable to the original frame of the government,
it cannot be doubted to be the will and act of the
society, whoever permitted or caused them so to do.